A small fragment only from the hommage programme of ERT, which was lasting some four hours in four parts. 1996, if I remember well.
Many fragments are to be found on the Youtube fortunately, not only with Giorgos Dalaras himself, but with Xaris Alexiou, Anastasia Moutsatsou (my favourites), Mariza Koch and another ones. Enjoy this now:

Listening to many of live recordings and after five concerts of Kyrios Giorgos I could attend, I miss always the same possibilities.
Not only the "backstage" meetings (I wanted this time so much to ask about Giannis Fertis and Giannis Kalatzis - any info appreciated) , but
1. the second fragment of "Pou einai ta xronia", "St'arxontiko sou...."
2. the whole, but the whole "Mi mou thimoneis, matia mou"
3. the spoken introduction to "Ti na thimitho, ti na ksexaso".
An important part of this very short song gets lost - and, althought Giannis Fertis gave with his voice an unique value to this text, should this get lost for ever in the concerts because of his absence?
Missing these three parts I feel always disappointed, as if they were unfinished fairy-tails.
Understandable, if a song is present in your life already some 40 years, it is a long time and thousands of performances.
But this means, possibly not for me alone, "a luck of repetition" of an old personal and/or family ritual.
This is why I would like soooo much to hear this "Mi mou thimoneis" live in its original, chamber version, and not the orchestral one, used after the Israeli Philharmonic' concerts. These fat orchestral additions in the interludes make me irritated.
Just because this is the most important work of the whole Greek music for all of us in my family. And so already more than 30 years.
Nevertheless, thanks to a phone connection, both my mother and my father could hear this "Pou einai ta xronia" kai this "Mi mou thimoneis".
The first one was, since I remember my own life, always a favourite of myself, a long time before I could understand the text.
And the second one is always of my father, despite of the passed time, always with these rare moments of tenderness in his voice.
Euxaristoume.